After
far too long, my first book has been published and is available in
various eBook formats as well as a dead tree (paperback) format.
Clearly, it's the best novel ever written and will, before too long,
become the fabled Hollywood best seller ... er ... about that ...

But
I digress ... I created a document (SHYF
Notice), a sort of advert, so if you feel like posting it up
places (it can be printed half size if it's too large) or otherwise
spreading the word, I will be forever in your debt :)

If you are tempted by a copy, eBooks can be bought from the usual places
(Amazon globally, Apple etc.) and the paperback version from my
publisher, Fiction4All using the links below. Signed copies can be
obtained directly from me which, for the UK at least, won't cost you
anything more except some additional postage. I hope to be attending
some conventions next year (I'll post up here) so that will be another
opportunity to buy signed copies.

Ten years
ago, Tuesday 30th October 2007, my oldest brother Paul was interred
after taking GHB a well-known recreational and date rape drug.
Unfortunately, he had also been drinking heavily and once he took the
drug I guess his body just stopped.Paul Posing

The funeral was humanist and was extremely well handled by the
celebrant, showing respect to those of faiths other than my own (which
happens to be none) and I was one of those who spoke.

So, I have finally resubmitted my first book having made a number of changes. There's a new "prologue" chapter designed to create a high-action opening sequence, simplified sub-headings for all chapters to provide a clear location and date, more conversation and other changes. I now believe that the book flows better and addresses some of the concerns my publisher raised. The book is now some forty-two chapters i.e. some 87,000 words of actual story so now all I have to do is wait and wonder what on Earth am I going to call my website when I finally publish?

With stunning graphics and a stellar cast "Passengers" (2016) is a film that should have blown us away but instead it received heavy criticism but was that criticism as deserved as some would have us believe? I received a copy on Blu-ray for my birthday so I set about finding out if I agreed with the film's critics. Everyone knows it's rare for Hollywood to get it right in terms of the science and this film is no exception but, since just about every other film is the same, I feel it's unfair to unduly criticise it for it. And besides, "Passengers" is not really a science fiction film any more than "Titanic" is a film about a ship hitting an iceberg, it's a romance.

Chris Prat, Jennifer Lawrence, Laurence Fishburne and, my favourite, Martin Sheen deliver excellent performances and the film certainly doesn't lack for action. The music was good throughout and only spoiled when it accompanied the closing credits, a jarring track I assume was intended to boost the film through the music charts.

In the end, I felt most of the criticisms levelled at the film were explained within it and despite all the criticisms I could level at the film's science, I still enjoyed it perhaps because of the chemistry between the actors.

A book with moments of extreme violence, but not pointless, violence and one that I think is very much worth a read. It opens with a brutal murder, the victim gruesomely, yet artistically, displayed which leads both the lead detective and a reporter to the conclusion that the murder was likely to be one of a series, the murderer a serial killer. In writing this book, the author has woven a story around complex characters with believable personal motivations using good dialogue as well as nail biting, harrowing and gripping scenes. Definitely a book worth a read.

It seems to me
that the science fiction bookverse (for lack of a better term) is awash
with books that seem to tell the same basic story, that Earth is under
attack (again) and that evil dastardly aliens are afoot. Whilst I
understand that an author wants their readers to care about their
characters and their story (if only to make them buy the sequels) I find
this kind of scenario unadventurous and frustrating. I've read a lot of
science fiction in my time and it is possible to get your readers to
care even if the Earth is not in immediate danger of destruction.

It
is said that opinions are like ****holes, we all have one but nothing
about possessing ones means you're right, not unless you can justify it.
With that in mind I am reviewing a book I happen to like by an author I
happen to revile, especially the misbegotten abortion he spawned. I'm
not saying it's a good book, just that I like it for various reasons.

With hindsight, a somewhat optimistic review of my first book's progress. Yes, the book is still coming along, still "completed", it just appears that getting the thing published is a lot more complicated than I first thought it would be.

The
second Douglas E. Richard book I have read, "Split Second" is a
techno-thriller, an innovative twist of the science fiction staple of
time travel. The book is well-written, engaging and has a fair degree of
suspense... for those with strong feelings on such things, it is also
fairly violent and contains quite a lot of swearing. I found the book
hard to put down and my regular reading time was something I looked
forward to. I have no hesitation at all in recommending the book to
anyone who is a fan of either thrillers or Sci-Fi.

Well there it is, the book, my first ever, is largely done and I am now just waiting for the cover art to be completed. Two hundred and fifty-seven A4/Letter pages (line and a half spaced), fifty-four chapters and approximately eighty-five thousand words.

I've given details of the book itself before and I still don't want to give too much away right now but it is set nearly eight hundred years in the future, not ours, but that of an alternate history (which is why I call it an alternate future history) and humanity is once again engaged in what it does best, blowing the hell out of each other.